William Hurt, a leading man of 1980s Hollywood who rose to stardom as a cocky but indolent lawyer in “Body Heat,” won an Oscar for playing a gay man jailed ...
Mr. Hurt was later featured in the movies “Eyewitness” (1981), as a janitor who teams with a TV news reporter (Sigourney Weaver) to solve a murder, and “Gorky Park” (1983), based on a mystery novel by Martin Cruz Smith about a Soviet detective. Interviewed by the Times in 1989, he recalled that he once tried to escape out of a restaurant’s back door after realizing a photographer was waiting to snap his photo outside the main exit. Mr. Hurt attended Middlesex prep school in Massachusetts and Tufts University outside Boston, where he studied theology and then drama — “the next rung down on the ladder of ego,” as he put it — and received a bachelor’s degree in 1972. Beginning with “The Incredible Hulk” (2008), he appeared in several Marvel movies as Thaddeus “Thunderbolt” Ross, an Army general who becomes secretary of state. His travels took him to Ashland, Ore., where he had his breakthrough as an actor while appearing in a local production of Eugene O’Neill’s “Long Day’s Journey Into Night.” “I had worked for years in complete darkness, complete doubt, complete confusion,” he later told New York magazine. Although Mr. Hurt delighted in talking about acting, he said he had little interest in the celebrity status that accompanied his success. The movie was a sultry, shadow-filled throwback to 1940s film noirs like “Double Indemnity.” And Mr. Hurt — tall, blond and blue-eyed, with a square jaw and charmingly laconic screen persona — was suddenly in great demand. Before entering movies, Mr. Hurt built an extensive portfolio of theater roles, culminating in his Tony-nominated performance in David Rabe’s dark comedy “Hurlyburly,” which was directed by Mike Nichols and opened on Broadway in 1984. Cerebral and intense, balding by his mid-30s, he studied theology in college and continued to live on the East Coast even after he began making movies. By some accounts, he could be difficult to work with; he reportedly struggled with alcohol and drug abuse, and his former girlfriend Marlee Matlin, who won an Oscar starring opposite him in “Children of a Lesser God,” said in a 2009 memoir that he physically and emotionally abused her during their relationship in the 1980s. Ebert wrote that Mr. Hurt “creates a character utterly unlike anyone else he has ever played — a frankly theatrical character, exaggerated and mannered — and yet he never seems to be reaching for effects.” The next year, he delivered his breakout performance in director Lawrence Kasdan’s neo-noir thriller “Body Heat,” as a South Florida lawyer seduced by Kathleen Turner and roped into murdering her husband.
William Hurt, the Oscar-winning actor of “Broadcast News,” “Body Heat” and “The Big Chill,” has died. He was 71.
“If a director tells me to make the audience think or feel a certain thing, I am instantaneously in revolt,” Hurt said. After his torrid ‘80s run, Hurt fell increasingly out of favor with filmmakers in the ‘90s, and some reasoned that it was because of his reputation. The New Yorker called him “notoriously temperamental.” In 1989, Hurt married to Heidi Henderson, who he met at rehab. In 1986′s “Children of a Lesser God,” it was his co-star, Marlee Matlin, who took the Oscar for her performance as a custodian at a school for the deaf. “The art of acting requires as much solitude as the art of writing. “Acting is a very intimate and private thing,” Hurt told The New York Times in 1983.
A four-time Academy Award nominee, he starred in such films as “Body Heat,” “The Big Chill,” “Children of a Lesser God” and “Broadcast News.”
While he can create a powerful character when he wants to (as he did with Kenneth Talley in the original production of “Fifth of July”), he’s prepared to be fascinating without any help from a playwright.” “Maybe William Hurt has now been discovered by Hollywood (‘Altered States,’ ‘Eyewitness’), but he hasn’t lost any of that crazy intensity that makes him a joy to watch in the theater,” Mr. Rich’s review began. In 1981, Frank Rich, reviewing “Childe Byron” at Circle Rep for The Times, singled him out.
Over that decade plus, Hurt was nominated for three best actor Oscars (Children, Kiss of the Spider Woman – for which he won – and Broadcast News). He could ...
But the fact that his name belongs next to theirs when considering Hurt at his best just tells you how rare the air was when he was sailing through it. The last thirty years of his hit and miss career should not overshadow that fact. While Hurt did pepper the last thirty years of his resume with art-house successes (Smoke, Jane Eyre, One True Thing, Into The Wild), cashed some high grade paychecks for Marvel, and dropped in for small parts in some other notable films (even scoring a fourth Oscar nomination in the category of supporting actor for David Cronenberg’s masterful A History of Violence), he never came close to recapturing the heat that radiated with his every step from 1980 to 1991. In some ways, it’s almost as if he stuck around so long and kept so busy (he has just over 100 credits to his name) with projects that didn’t meet his mettle that we simply forgot just how great he was. Even in his second tier films during that period (Eyewitness, Gorky Park, Woody Allen’s Alice), he was so eminently watchable that not only could you not take your eyes off of him, you could forgive the more pedestrian aspects of those films. He could exude warmth and tenderness (Children of a Lesser God, Kiss of the Spider Woman), play brilliant men (The Doctor, The Accidental Tourist), and also characters who aren’t as smart as they think they are (Body Heat), or, in the case of Broadcast News, a man who knew he wasn’t all that bright, but was just intelligent enough to know how to get ahead on looks and confidence – in short, he could do anything.
(WGHP) — William Hurt, an Oscar-winning actor famous for his roles in "Kiss of the Spider Woman" as well as "Avengers: Infinity War" and other Marvel ...
He was later nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor for his roles in “Children of a Lesser God” and “Broadcast News.” Hurt won the Academy Award for Best Actor in 1985 for his role as Luis Alberto Molina in “Kiss of the Spider Woman,” according to IMDB. (WGHP) — William Hurt, an Oscar-winning actor famous for his roles in “Kiss of the Spider Woman” as well as “Avengers: Infinity War” and other Marvel Cinematic Universe films, has died at the age of 71.
(Undated) — Actor William Hurt is dead at the age of 71. Hurt is best known for Oscar winning performance in “Kiss of the Spider Woman.